Networked tribes, system disruption and the emerging bazaar of violence. A blog about the future of conflict.

Over the last several weeks we've seen a rapid diminishment in the fictive kinship that unites us as Americans. In fact, many of us don't just disagree with other Americans. We see them as existential threats.

Here are the existential threat narratives:

"crypto-fascist science deniers demanding a return to the racism and misogyny of the 1950's, while stripping away the rights of immigrants, on the way to sending brown people, LGBTs, and muslims to concentration camps"

"crypto-Stalinist thought police demanding compliance with fake science and virtue-signaling identity performance from all, on the way to Gulag World with straight white males at the bottom. Ideally killing millions along the way"

These threat narratives appear to be contributing the growing belief we are headed towards a civil war as this new poll shows:

"Thirty-one percent (31%) of Likely U.S. Voters say it’s likely that the United States will experience a second civil war sometime in the next five years"

"Democrats (37%) are more fearful than Republicans (32%)"

PS: I'm writing this month's GG report on how repeated and intentional disruptions are driving us towards collapse. Here's a teaser.

Sunday, 24 June 2018

Here's a good example of global guerrilla tinkering and decentralized defense.

Fire Kites

Palestinian guerrillas in the Gaza strip have developed a simple and effective weapon for disrupting Israel. It's a fire kite. Here are the details (reuters video report):

A homemade kite, built out of transparent plastic (making it hard to spot). This is the delivery vehicle.

The warhead is a long tail and fringe soaked in flammable liquid. The tip of the tail is a burning rag or burning coal.

The kites drift into Israel (courtesy of prevailing winds along the entire border with Gaza), fall to the ground, and start fires.

Prevailing winds

So far, the kites appear to be working, largely because they are:

so easy and cheap to build (under $3 in commonly available materials),

so easy to launch (get the kite aloft from anywhere along the border and let it go), and

able to do significant damage when they do land (millions in fire damage already reported).

To defend against these attacks:

Israel turned to reservists who are drone hobbyists (this allowed them to stand up a drone defense system nearly overnight),

The drone pilots either tangle themselves up with the kite (with both falling to ground) or they grab what's left of the kite's string and drag it to the ground. So far, they've downed far more than 500 fire kites this way.

Israel has promised to compensate the drone owners for any broken drones.

The Real Threat to Israel

However, as interesting as these fire kites are, there is a twist. It's likely that these fire kites are good news for Israel. Here's why:

The fire kites provide Israel with a figleaf. A visible justification for continuing aggressive military action against the Palestinians in Gaza (the kites, although expensive in property damage, are largely non-lethal and they provide dramatic visuals). This justification provides some protection against an emerging threat to Israel.

Israel has always been vulnerable to a boycott. An investment, business, and systemic boycott that disconnects Israel from the world. So far, Israel has been good at working behind the scenes to prevent this. However, that's not likely good enough anymore. The world has changed.

The rapid rise of the #resistance network and surging networked corporatism changes everything. These networks have both the capability and the disposition to disconnect Israel from the world, nearly overnight, if they are triggered by perceptions of immoral behavior directed against the people of Gaza. State directed violence, without a meaningful threat to justify it (a threat that these kites seem to provide), could be enough to trigger these networks into action.

PS: The Fire Kites are also a good opportunity to run through the logic of making big jumps in innovation (ala "making snowmobiles" as John Boyd would say). I'm writing up my notes on this and will post them soon.

PPS: Things are spinning out of control very fast now in the US. The fictive kinship that held us together as a nation has collapsed. Nothing but dark skies ahead.

Thursday, 24 May 2018

Given what we've seen so far, it isn't likely that we're going to see a return to the 20th Century model, with its absolute dictators, industrial scale bureaucracies, paramilitaries, ideologies, ubiquitous/vicious secret police, relentless propaganda, etc...

That model died when globalization and the Internet hollowed out the nation-state.

The new model of authoritarianism. The model that is sweeping the world is very different.

It's networked.

These networks aren't formal constructs. They don't rely on rigid ideologies or hierarchies. They don't even use the left/right spectrum.

Instead, they are open, amorphous, and participatory. Networks that are in constant motion... nominally led by political showmen with little real power.

These networks don't rely on government bureaucracies to coerce people. They coerce bureaucracies.

Moreover, they are more effective than bureaucracies in the elements of power that matter.

They are capable of spying on more people than the East German secret police and they can stifle free speech without recourse to a gulag.

They don't have any need for state produced propaganda or the media to control the narrative. They can produce a blinding blizzard of spin that can overwhelm official narratives.

In short, 21st Century authoritarianism is very different. It's not what the experts and the media pundits are warning against and that's why it will sneak up on us.

Sincerely,

John Robb

PS: I'm digging into what makes these networks so effective in the next Global Guerrillas Report (as always, thanks so much for your support, it makes the work I do possible).

Friday, 11 May 2018

The EU's new data privacy law is just about to come into effect (May 25th).

That law makes it very hard for Facebook and other services to collect data on individuals because it has a very high privacy standard.

That's a problem for Facebook and many other Internet companies.

Facebook, and other tech companies, set up a fake International Head Quarters in Ireland to avoid paying US taxes.

However, since Ireland is part of the EU, all two billion plus Facebook users now fall under the EU's new data protection law (GDPR).

Facebook is now feverishly working on ways to legally transfer global users outside of the EU back to the US (the major region with the least protection for privacy) while maintaining the tax haven in Ireland.

This vulnerability points to an opportunity for the EU to radically change the world.

What if the EU offered to extend coverage under their new data privacy/protection law (GDPR) to anyone who requested it, no matter where they lived?

Think of it as data asylum.

It would cost the EU nothing to implement (in fact, just the opposite, it could net them lots of $$ in fines).

It would also be easy to implement.

All that is needed is a provision that any big Internet company doing business in the EU would be required to offer the EU's end user license agreement (EULA) as an option for all accounts, no matter where they lived.

PS: Or, it might be possible to get the same effect by switching your country of origin/location in Facebook and Twitter to Germany..

Thursday, 10 May 2018

I did a long interview with Jack Murphy and Ian Scotto for SOFRep Radio earlier this week (the first 45 m or so prominently features my staccato/machine/Boydian gun style of thinking/speaking).

We talked about many of the topics I'm currently writing about in greater detail with The Global Guerrillas Report. Topics such as China's tyrannical social credit system, open source political parties (they have already rolled the Republican party and they are about to do it to the Dems), how moral warfare works online (shaming and naming, etc.), and modern Tribalization.

In the last segment, we touched on something I haven't written much about yet: the potential for widespread civil conflict in the US and how that impacts our thinking on resilience.

Why so pessimistic? It's becoming clear that the US doesn't have a shared narrative anymore. A narrative, combined with rituals and traditions, that provides us with us the basis of fictive kinship.

A kinship, not based on DNA, that allows us to trust each other rather than as strangers/enemies.

A shared understanding of moral and ethical conduct (the soft elements that make it possible for a legal and regulatory system to work).

An understanding that we are better off together than apart.

Where did our fictive kinship go?

We killed it. We didn't alter it, adapt it, or evolve it. We strangled it and the rising sociopolitical incoherence we are seeing is the result.

The big question is whether we can survive the future without it? I suspect the answer to that is more no than yes. If that's true, it makes civil collapse a very viable future.

Sincerely,

John Robb

PS: I'll be writing about the potential for civil conflict in the US and how that impacts our thinking on resilience in a future Global Guerrillas Report.

to figure out how we can adapt to the challenges we face without the radical simplification of societal collapse.

After I wrote the report, I sent it out to my friend David for feedback. He really liked one of my footnotes. In that footnote, I used TIMN to do some fun analysis of the struggle between Fascism, Communism, and Democracy in the 20th Century.

The analysis looked at each organizational form (the three that were active in the 20th Century were tribalism, institutions, and markets) as contributors to a societal decision making process (simplified by Boyd's OODA).

In the 20th Century, tribes and tribalism made contributions to orientation via nationalism. The narratives that create fictive kinship. It defines us and them. It orients decision making by answering the questions: who benefits? who with? by what means? by which limits?

In the 20th Century, the institutional bureaucracy was responsible for conducting total war. Bureaucracies contribute to observation (gathering information in a structured way, from the census to the secret police), the structured evaluation of options (cost benefit analysis, plans, ideological dictate, etc.) and action (implementation at scale).

Markets provide decentralized information discovery (observation) and the means to derive a consensus (price, etc.) on which alternative is superior. Markets also provide a means of assembling and allocating the resources required for implementation (action) and motivating participation (orientation).

Through this lens, the 20th struggle between can be boiled down into a struggle between three different types of decision making systems:

Fascism. Markets (commercial only) and bureaucracy are slaved to tribalism.

Communism. Tribalism slaved to bureaucracy. No markets.

Democracy. A fluid mix of tribalism, bureaucracy, and markets (commercial and political).

Who won? The system that allowed that used all three decision making systems, the US (UK,etc). The US (and the brand of democratic capitalism it promoted) was a Swiss army knife of social decision making. It used what works. This flexibility provided it with more resilience than its competitors and the ability to exploit the opportunities made possible by complexity (from nuclear weapons to computers).

Another interesting observation is that institutions (bureaucratic decision making) don't generate orientation. They are reliant on tribalism for orientation. As we saw under Communism and Fascism, bureaucracies are equally at home implementing genocide as they are at providing social safety nets to the poor/elderly.

On Brave New War

G. Gordon Liddy Show (radio)...this is a seminal book in the truest sense of the term.. way ahead of the curve... go out and buy it right now -- G. Gordon Liddy

City JournalRobb has written an important book that every policymaker should read -- Glenn Reynolds (Instapundit)

Small Wars JournalWithout reservation Brave New War is for professional students of irregular warfare and for any citizen who wants to understand emerging trends and the dark potential of 4GW -- Frank Hoffman

Scripps Howard News ServiceA brilliant new book published by terrorism expert John Robb, titled "Brave New War," hit stores last month with virtually no fanfare. It deserves both significant attention and vigorous debate... - Thomas P.M. Barnett

Chet Richards DNIJohn has produced an important book that should help jar the United States and other legacy states out of their Cold War mindset. You can read it in a couple of hours – so you should read it twice...

Washington Times / UPIRobb correctly finds the antidote to 4GW not in Soviet-style state structures such as the Department of Homeland Security, but in decentralization -- William Lind (the father of 4th generation warfare).

Robert PatersonHaving painted a crystal clear picture of how a war of networks is playing out, he comes to an astonishing conclusion that I hope he fills out in his next book.

The Daily DishJohn Robb of Global Guerrillas has written the most important book of the year, Brave New War. - Daily Dish (The Atlantic)

Simulated LaughterWell-written. Brave New War reads more like an action novel than a ponderous policy book. - Adam Elkus

FutureJackedGo buy a copy of this book. Now. If you are low on cash, skip a few lunches and save up the cash. It is worth it. - Michael Flagg

ZenPunditThe second audience is composed of everyone else. Brave New War is simply going to blow them away. - Mark Safranski

Haft of the SpearThere aren’t a lot of books that make me recall a 12-year-old self aching for the next issue of The Invincible Iron Man to hit the shelves. Well done.
- Michael Tanji

Ed ConeHis book posits an Army of Davids -- with the traditional nation state in the role of Goliath. - Ed Cone (Ziff Davis)

Shloky.comThis is the first real text on next generation warfare designed for the general population and it sets the bar high for following acts. It is smart, it is a short read, and it will change your thinking. - Shlok Vaidya

Politics in the ZerosI suggest this is something Lefties need to start thinking about now, as that decentralized world is coming. - Bob Morris